sendfile

Synopsis

Description

The sendfile() function copies data from in_fd to out_fd starting at offset
off and of length len bytes. The in_fd argument should be a
file descriptor to a regular file opened for reading. See open(2). The out_fd
argument should be a file descriptor to a regular file opened for
writing or to a connected AF_INET or AF_INET6 socket of SOCK_STREAM type.
See socket(3SOCKET). The off argument is a pointer to a variable holding the
input file pointer position from which the data will be read. After
sendfile() has completed, the variable will be set to the offset of
the byte following the last byte that was read. The sendfile() function
does not modify the current file pointer of in_fd, but does modify the
file pointer for out_fd if it is a regular file.

The sendfile() function can also be used to send buffers by pointing
in_fd to SFV_FD_SELF.

Return Values

Upon successful completion, sendfile() returns the total number of bytes written to
out_fd and also updates the offset to point to the byte that
follows the last byte read. Otherwise, it returns –1, and errno is set
to indicate the error.

Errors

The sendfile() function will fail if:

EAFNOSUPPORT

The implementation does not support the specified address family for socket.

EAGAIN

Mandatory file or record locking is set on either the file descriptor or output file descriptor if it points at regular files. O_NDELAY or O_NONBLOCK is set, and there is a blocking record lock. An attempt has been made to write to a stream that cannot accept data with the O_NDELAY or the O_NONBLOCK flag set.

EBADF

The out_fd or in_fd argument is either not a valid file descriptor, out_fd is not opened for writing. or in_fd is not opened for reading.

EINVAL

The offset cannot be represented by the off_t structure, or the length is negative when cast to ssize_t.

EIO

An I/O error occurred while accessing the file system.

ENOTCONN

The socket is not connected.

EOPNOTSUPP

The socket type is not supported.

EPIPE

The out_fd argument is no longer connected to the peer endpoint.

EINTR

A signal was caught during the write operation and no data was transferred.

Usage

The sendfile() function has a transitional interface for 64-bit file offsets. See
lf64(5).

Examples

Example 1 Sending a Buffer Over a Socket

The following example demonstrates how to send the buffer buf over a
socket. At the end, it prints the number of bytes transferred over
the socket from the buffer. It assumes that addr will be filled
up appropriately, depending upon where to send the buffer.